war-hid‘: " "9 " r -. »...-w.._~_ . PAGE romz TIIE BIIAR LOTT ETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded 1881) President, LIeuL-Col. W. Charter S. McLnre Vice President, .I. R. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary, LIeuL-Col. D. A. MacKInnon; 0.5.0. Editor and Managing DINMOI‘, J. t; Burnett. l-‘J-x Associate Editor. Frank Wilkes’ SUBSCRIPTION BATES‘ to u‘ ‘.00 r "ear (In advance) dellvere ' 7. $4.0‘: perpficu): tin advance] mailed to P. B. Island 55.00 per scar (in advance: mailed to Canada and U-8 Members Audit. Bureau of Circulation! "The Strongest tllenwry is Weaker than {Ire IVea/reat Ink." WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER Z, I938 Australian Butler Imports i": Federal .\lini=ter of Agricul- lzi lj w-rztl organ. it is not "t i:n;~.»r:cil into Can- _' the Fed- ~ _ that dur-| .i;t exported to, utter. as compared ‘ug fiscal year. New Zcaland t-rtrly zi mil- lllllltl’ en- homc pro- Ottawa in l5 “P35. es to the by-election e .n two Quebec Prov- B-vtli are swaight blontreal, Rwul o: tltc Dfillllfllufl is running as a "Lib- ocsed by Louis Fitch, of the D" lessis y. ovcrwhc g._v has never in its e of any other evcr-thelcss a close .\ . xrecd of thr- East- . D’ F C. Cabana, ' ' ‘Union. This L nion party in other things being vs of the Duple man ' .n those of his . pofimg i these ttvo .. to how well Quebec's ‘e Gov rztmrnt is wearing in the ‘ er all administration are WxHar-fl sh ow M r. bfacKenziek Evidence i.\:'lf he no satisfaction and much regret, “t cg Free llrc=s (Liberal). HWY - by the Hon. Ian Mackenzie, "C l II . of Xanonal Defence, during his evid- wrc ‘the llren gun inquiry, that he was i '. the. SlIIlPlll-‘IIIS he mztdc in the House’ . \\'<'I'kr corrcm. The fact is that very i ion was withheld from the tit roL-c without the faintest idea. of important circumstances surrounding oi the contract to Major Hahn. s liudly flu: fzutlt of the mctnbers of ~ \4I1l'lfrll< mcn mmlc strenuous ef- ll-. . forts- io go’. at the-c facts. They failed because Mr. klziciaiir/ic elullc-l them by making replies which, though IWTIIFIIIS technically justified un- dcr tho rultw of tlu- llou-c. were not Justified at flu: all uht-it the public imL-rc-t is considered. Mr. _ 5, \\'i,inl-\\lirzli, for t-xnmplc, ziskcd if .\l.'tjor 11311,, 11nd hrc-n appointcfl by the Canadian Gov- ernment to go to England to make a survey of rtumiiions ptw >ductioi1 for the purpose of advising the cjmmllistn iilt\'cl'lllll('lll. Mr. Vackcnzie, in hi,» Qyidcncc lirforc thc inquiry, said that r\l:tjor Hahn hrtd cc'-'crl. to lic a reprcsenlative of the Q;,,,;,(1i,-,n IlOYcfIIlllCHI on Dec. 5, r936. He (Lqimcil ho ivzis justifiwl in nnswcring “No," t0 Al]; \\'r|o4l-\vurll1'_\ quc-lion. $uppo-t: that .\li'. Wirod-ivorili hztrl said Milky," jncu-“(l of “r9571 According to .\lr. Nitfilacnzifis rcztstming, which Zllllliffffllll)’ satis- fit-tl him, lu- could .\llll answr-r "No." llCC-"IIISC llqinr llrilm was not (Ipllfillllml l" H" l“ 1511f!" 15m,‘ M. H“. ('_-,,,;,,li;|n (iovi-riitnvnt. llo was 11W].- uln official rcprcscntzifivc tiflrr he gut to ‘Unrpn, _.,,,,| fmmd the doors of the “Tar Office "furl llic l-Infit-lrl fnctonv closed to him. llut. >_,,l,l,,,.(. gm, _\[r_ \\'oodsworlh had TC-[Jllflhfifl flint pflrl of his question accurately al-o, .\lr. Mackenzie could still have honcstly- fCpllPfl “_\'1,," to the qucsfion, for Mr. \'\ mflsxvortl‘: a. m1 if _\l,'ijor llzihn had been appointed to m‘ _.(_ n >-\ll~\r(k.\' n,‘ “nmniiion; productivin" whore- a- ltis official status rclzitcrl only to llrcu guns _<|.ccificztll_t' (‘XCIIIIIWI other forms of muni- and _ [ions PFOIIIICIIHII. _ f\lr. Xlztckctizie fhcrcfore lmd three tios-"ible lim-s of rll-fcitcv, ull of which were te_cliiiic:illy' nfl.,,,.l,u.' 1,“; all of which had the‘ unlortunntc effi-cl of itii-lczitling the llotisc- of (ominous nnd Illc (‘annrlinn |I('1t]]l('. Tho lircc Prz-ss adds! _ “The .;,,,],r,.,-,§.,n Mr, Blnckcnzte left on the A,,,,_,.,_;u,,1 if i; (lifficult to imagine Ihntp-‘o n rlt-bnlcr would lcrpc ill" "lll"'t°-‘]‘“£“ ' '- ~- cr than tmt 1c wztn m o ffwiiisiisililiiiiil,oliiiite indc-pctnlcntly of thC (‘AHQIIIIIII Covcrinntiit. Klajor llflllll ll-‘Ill "lmlc fa fnvn,._.,i,p. im|,r¢<_<i<_n1 upon the British peo- lc.’ \\'c now know. of course. how that ‘conic iihouf Klnjor llnlm ‘lind ncccss to the sprcifica- lions ‘for the llrz-it gun.’ Ilow did he got them? \v-,,',,,,,,. knmv, though the llousc of (ffmlljoufi '1 of, ‘It is quite possible the sticcificztiions Al“ n l vwihble to anv comPf-‘lllm-i W" ‘vduhll m‘, "Wota- iiol after nlllthc Dvpnrttncnt of Slmlih inyncffflcc had done for Ilajor llrthn! Nmmllnl \Ir Hnckcnzie breathe a word of rill 3,2‘: tisrth; l-Igiise of Commons? Not one word. why p" prncli<cll \Var's Wastage Now is a very good time to recall what war costs, not only in ruined lives, damaged pro- perty, and stibseqtient reparations and pensions, but also in good hard cash. In the current issue oi "International Conciliation" thcrc is an érticlc by T. ‘VZIISOII which is reprinted from “Think? This article sets forth what the Unit- ed States spent on the World \\'ar and for clean- ing up ztftcr the \\'.1r. And although the Unit- ed Stan-s was actively engaged only for about a year and a half, the figure stands at more than 50 billions of dollars. , Mr. \\'atson estimates what constructive work I might have been done with this moucy-nviring all the United States homes now without elec- IIIOCUIYEIIII paying off all farm mortgages and equipping all farm homes with bathtubs; doub- ling the educational endowments and building four large consolidated schools in each countv; building million dollar airports in each county; establishing a trust fund that would pay $100 , pensions to all blind and deaf persons; spending ‘rive billions on flood and erosion control; build- ing another Panama Canal and to bridges like the Triborough one; duplicating relief expendi- ture since I932: endowiitg an organization to promote {mace so that it would have more funds than the present League of Nations and the \\'orld Court and the International Labor Of- fice combined. That is what might have been done with tht- 5O billions squandered b\' the \\l.-rlll \\':lr. I 1 Editorial Notes I All Soul's Day. i I i 1 Thelast merchanrman to be sunk In the Great War was torpedoed in the Mediterranean this date, 1918. . n n I I The City Garden scheme has been success- fully founded, and all that remains is to develop it along right lines. i: a u n \\'e are told that the officials at “Yishington are busy “polishing-up" the L'.S..-\.-Canada 'I‘radc Treaty after the details have been com- pleted. Evidently with a view to "polishing-off” Canada and the Maritimes in paricular. 11 K l 8 Since the Pension Act became effective dur- ing the \\'orld \\'ar, Canada has paid a total of $770,017,364 in pensions, the bill sometimes be- ing as high as a million a week. The Dominion thus cannot be fairly charged with neglect of war veterans. r It is reported Parliament at the coming ses- sion will he asked by the Government to ap- propriate Flcrooopoo for a still further en- i ll l largcd ‘defence programme, and this time with special stress on the needs of the air force and defence against possible air raids. Last year $35,000,000 was voted. Canada is better equip- ped now than ever before to turn out first line miliary planes, because there has been a steady development in the aircraft industry in the past two years. m After all it takes a man who has actually worked at the job to tell us the qualifications necessary for its adequate performance. For this reason we are greatly indebted to Canon \\'. Thompson Elliott, Vicar of Leeds, for telling us the accomplishments necessary for success as a clergyman. At the Church Congress at Bristol, England, the other day he said: “Every vicar must be a preacher, a teacher, a visitor, an or- ganizcr, good with men, with women, with young people, with children, something of a musician, ‘something of a business man, firm but gentle in character, strong but tactful, able to handle dif- ficult members of his congregation, to lend the church council in paths 0f wisdom, to cheer the sick and warn the sinner, to be all things to all men and yet preserve his own self-respect, dign- ity and itidcpentlcnce." at Ir w =r Rt. Hon. Sir john Anderson, P.C., G.C.B., G.C.I.IZ., who has just entered the Chamberlain Governtncnt as Lord Privy Seal, but in reality to act as Klinister of llcfcncc, though .1 comparatively young itiztn-hc is llfl_\'~sl.\'~—llilsll long successful ztdminisfrzttivc carccrbchiiul him. llc is a Scotsman, a nzuivc of Dztlkcith, Mid Lolli- iztn and entered the Colonial Office as a Clerk in NW5. Since then hc has hccn SPCTCIIIT)’ of thc Xortlicrn Nigeria Land (foumiissioii which >01- tlcd differences with thc nzuivcs; Sccrclaiy of the \\'cst African Currency Committee which properly aligned native currency with sterling; Secretary of the Insurance Commission; Soc- rctnry to the Blinisfcr of Shipping during the war; Chairman of the Board of Inland Rcvcnuc; Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Per- mnticnt Under Secretary of State, Home Office; Covz-rnor and Pacifier of Bengal from I032 to 103"». He will be a tower of strength to the (‘lmmbcrlnin Government in the strenuous times through which we are passing. tit ill‘!!! The week-end tourist ovcr flic lmrtrdcr arc rcnp- iuq a rich lutrvt-st in (lutyi-frcc imports. The six month sinnmci" tourist scztsrwn of I039, front .\pril I to Svptcmbcr 30, brought over $4,500,- noo worth of Amcricmt goods info Canada duly frcc, :tccor<ling to figures just rclcrtscd by the office of IIoII. _l. L. Ilslcy, Minister of Na- lionnl hcvcnuc. Yndcr thc $100 (‘xenlptlon clan-c. (‘muuli:tns returning from visits to the lYiitr-d Stan's brought in rlutiable goods in the six monll1< to .1 value of $4,553.09, while tho privilcgc \\';\< cxcrciscd In the extent of $404.47.; lr_v (‘zumvlintis from other countries. The out- Ktlmvliuu ilcm of import was clothing. which ztmounft-rl to $2,290,530 from all countries, the portion from 1hr l'nitc<l States alone being $2.- 105265. .\'<-xt in value cnmc furniture and lllrlhrllirlfl appliances totalling $551,170, with 3527-"33 coming front across the lino. Then fol- lowed hoot: and shoe: vnluvrl at $518,722. of \\'l\l¢l195o3.,11fi was from the States: radios 5352-336. of which $351,509 was from the States. ‘ M. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY . ‘Income police commissioner hu set. himself up as a one-man can. 5°79!!!) board to determlne what the press and radio may use as news . Just the first step In 2m effort to keep the people [mm KIWV-‘IHE what their servants are doIngn-Stratford Beacon-Herald. In some part: of Canada 1h]; has been a record-breaking year for the production of butter: As a result we timv have more butter than we will know what to do with during the Winter, and we W111 have considerable difficulty In selllng It to other countries because_ many of them fIncIudIng the United States) also have heavy surpluses. Attorney-General Conant places on the shoulders of municipal authorities the responsibility enforcing the new section of the Criminal Code which was de- signed to ban slot machines. No_fau1t can be found WIIII this. It 1S clearly the duly of mun!- cipal police to sce that this law is maintained, though It Is not easy to see why a provincial policeman should tvink his eye If he sees the law belng broken. But Mr. Cnnnnt goes on to say that he cannot understand the exact zncnziinz of the sccllon which catnc into rffcct on Sep- tember 1. Well, If the chief law officer of the province cannot understand It. how can municipal atrthoritics be expected to do 507- Witidsor Star. After many yours of experience on the bettch Alflglslffift‘ Elliot very definitely puts the blame for the major portion of juvenile delinquency not on the children but omthelr parents. "I recognize in punishing the boys," said the magistrate. "but YlIOtL’ who should be punished tnost nre kitting in the body of the court, the parents, who are primarily responsible and whose failure Is responsible for these youths appearing In the His Worship unquestion- ably strikes ru." ' at the Iienrt of the problem in while there are exceptions to the _ ‘ct that In a great portion of the oases that a deeper sense 0t responsibility on the part of the parcnrs would have pre- vented young people following courses which lead them into the courts. -SauIt Ste Marie Star. Too great emphasis is lald on the independence of the Dominicans establfshed by the Statute of Westminlster, 1931. That way leads to disruption of the Empire. In truth. the Dominfons are no more “Indepentlcnfl of Brltain than Brltuin is “Inglependenfi of the Domfnions. Instead of “independ- ence" the keynote should be "co- partnershlpj’ In order to make the machinery of consultation effective it Is submitted that. the Foreign Office should absorb the Domin- Ions Office and become the Foreign and Dominions Office. The Torcign Secretary would thus become the Foreign and Dominions Secretary. At Geneva. rthe Foreign Office f: In dlrect. contact with the Do- minion Govcrnntcnf: ' ith rcgard to tho affairs of tlic Iscuctit‘ of Na- tions. Tltorc is no (‘ogcnl reason why this direct contact. between principals should not cover all other foreign affairs In which the Domlnlons are mutually concerned with the Home Govcrnmcnt. — Letter in Edinburgh Scotsmmr The safe landing of a. burn- Ing air liner a few miles out of Montgomery, Aln., TGCPIIYIV de- serves to be long remembered, and not only as a STORY of individual courage and coolhondedncss in the face of danger. The Iinppmiing with its happy etiding should go fur toward dispelling any notion that even a major accident In the air necessarily result-s in disaster. 1f would be hard to Imagine a. more terrible set of circumstances than those which suddenly con- fronted pilot. copilol- and steward 0f the Eastern Airlines plane. In some unrxplninr-rl way the shin took fire. The flames qulcklv burned atvnv the moorings of one motor and It fell from the ship. The pilot himself was pretty burl- 1y burned. His landing lights al- most failrrl m work And evcn as the fiery ‘plane "was larotigltt down the right wing IVIEQ torn away bv a tree. dvcvertheloss. the passen- gers were kept cnlm and prepared for the emorgettci’ lnndlng. the ‘plane was brought down safely and nvcijvbntlv was out of If be- fore. if exploded. -I?<i1tiitiorc Sun. New motor torpedo-finals are comlng fcrvsnrrl from the builders for the Navv. The orig- inal flotilla. ordcrrrl t-xncrlmenf- nllv hv the Admirnltv aftcr much ltrzirlshnkini: b\' tnoro conser- vative schools of III/night among vfl!'1’l[,"l1("l‘§ nnd morino onginv-evs, h. coniplotcrl lwo \'I‘.’II‘$' of hard sorvicc In tho Ifvoivnrrnncnti with complctn success. Tho ticw Scott. Paint‘ boots now dun for rlcllvrrv r-mbodi‘ onlv n fcw minor modifi- cations. lIIO‘ll_\' for tho comfort of tho ctr-av. nlthouizlt tho ntorc distant fufnw- may soc consider- nhlo (I[’\'f‘l')])lII('IIlS ln the type. In the course of a rcccitf. . in thn wntrrs rotind the Isle of Wight I had an npporltmity of studying tho holmvlziur of fast, motor-craft. of this kind. Their mnnoeuvrnbflitj: is one of the re- markable characteristics. We made. several l0$I< of acceleration and stopping. Firm with n new boat whose cngincs wore not. fully run In. and mus! not. therefore he subjovtcrl to Ihr- extremes of strain suifnblo undcr ncflvc ser- vlcc conditions, thr- bont jumped from fivz- knots tn 38 In eight sec- onds. Evcn more slnrlllng was the tr=t of stopping n! high speed. The revolutions \f all three (‘IIIIIIWS were r~ut from I1F"I‘I_V 3.000 l0 something under 500 In ont- sweep of fhc Imvigofons hand. Without any jar or jolt tnr- craft lost speed. sctflrtl down oulrf on tho water. and within flirt-r- st-ronrls was crnwllnrr nlonrz nt fivo knots. Anv- ono who has oxperlcitccrl sudden brnkinir in n motor cru- at 40 mics an hour will find It hnrtl to bo- IIc-ve that attvthing moving could stop <0 sudclcnlv without a shock. -M:\ncIio.<tr-r ciunrrllnu. For some mnnfhs pnst I have wlfnv m! lltr- mot-lino of an Irrvssiflhlt- IOFN‘ anrl nn lmmov- able obit-cf. Thr- lrrrslrdlblo force ls rnv rlrsitt- to have mv IQ-vcar- old nephew. who Is temporarily In my Wire, Mk0 a both. The Im- movnble object. Is Robert hhnsr-If, who krwns us fr-i" nwny from fl bathtub as Is tmrslblr- In a modern mid lll‘I)7‘I’| sncivri: Pivcn n dlrlv boy. warm watt-r plenty of sonp, rod fluffy rh-v truvrls ivhv shouldn't there be n both, I nskr-(l. T wns soon ~ ‘Mm tho an=vr~rs-~-mttn_v ans- wers. At first. flir rcwscns were prosaic. Robert zlidu? thlnk he‘ I111 time for n bath bt-forr- school. By the time we fInIshed arguing Rob- of ‘Bren r___._ dibat ' THE FOUR OUTSTANDING FEATURES OF STOMACH AND INTESTINAL ULCEB Generally speakinz Physwlws- when there Is ain In the stom- ach, have In mind always the pos- sibility of cancer In patients past 40 years of age and ulcer In pat- ients under 40. He keeps In mind also the fact that most pains 1n the stomach are due to lfver and gall bladder conditions. There are a. great many young adults, especially the nervous OI‘ emotional ty . who fetu- that 1f their stomac pain or dfetrees Is not. cancer It must be ulcer. yet their very nervousness or their errwuonal upsetments can cause disturbances of the stomach and Intestine. Fortunately an examination by the Xray Is of great help In find- ing out. the cause of the symP- toms. There are certain polnts about ulcer of the stomach and of the first few inches of the small Intes- tine (du0denum—Into which the stomach empties) which stand out so clearly that they are considered to bu practically proof of ulcer. Dr. arles Gordon Heyd, In Amerlcan Journal of Science stat-es: “Tne indigestion, of stomach and duodenal ulcer Is a chronic con- dition, characterized by four out- standing features: l. It Ia tolerated without great distress. That Is. patients can us- ually bear the pain or distress but are always aware of It_ 2. The pain or distress always bears a relationship to the eating of food. as It comes on from 2 1-2 to 8 1-2 hours after eatfng. s. It. Is cyclic In character, corn- Ing on day after day at the same period after meals. 4. This pain occurring every day and at- the same time after meals Is present In the history of most patients. - T111: regularity snd c c1Ic occur- ence (2 1-2 to 3 1-2 ours after meals) of the symptoms In ulcer makes It easy for-the physician to tell what Is wrong with the pat-- lent before even the Xray examin- ation or the examination of the test meal Is made. Sometimes ulc- err heal of themselves and the scar formed when the ulcer heals may almost close the passage from the stomach to the small intestine. This would of course cause other symptoms besides the four above mentioned." The Truth Officially (Globe and Mail) Whatever else may result from the gun Inquiry for the better- ment. of natlonal defense. the In- vestfgatfon can be justified on the evidence of Hon. Ian Mackenzie alone. In two brief statements the Mitnster of Defense. with char- acteristic frankness. framed the whole sorry picture. Canada's forces, never adequate at any ume since the last war. have been "starved and crucified by neglect." And, more Important, under pres- ent clrcumstances. annual ex- penditures of $25,000,000 and $30,- 000000 are “too meagre." Former Governments at least had the popular Illusions of world security which prevailed until two or three years ago as an excuse for their contributions to thls mn- dltfon. But It was the present Prime Minister who, on a pIlgTIm- age to Geneva. found the illusions our and promised adequate Im- provements In the Dominforfs forces If ‘Mr. Mackenzie found them starved. It Is a. certainty that. the $34,090.000 hors dbeuvres served up In the past. two years ls a poor diet on which to build the strength demanded by Inter- national conditions and new meth- ods of war. Everything that has been said In criticism of Ottawa's nfggnrdliness stands. Mr. Mackenzielsstafemenfs condemn as a fraud the program within whfch he has been compelled to work, The knowledge that even Its provisions have not been fulfilled “seventy-eight planes In two years and a half. tank squads tralnlne ivlth SO-CRIIHI armored cars —-only increases the shame of It. flit-re can be no reasonable cx- pIMIMIOII -_nolItIcal or economical -for such downright neglect. 0t um was well warned. and Ot- tawa Ls In a better nosftlon than mo=t people to know which vimythe tide was running, It Is no credit 1o the Government that Canada scraped throuch the last crisis. But. havlng come fhrouzrh It, the public Is better equipped to un- flex-stand the situation, ‘Thanks to Mr, Markcnzle, It will see that we do not rlsk another In the same helpless state. Indian Summer (Hamilton Spectator) No one-not even the most embllfcd mlsnnfhroplsf —\vow ld have stopped during the past frw tve-eks to pIn down the orIgIn of Indian summer. That Is left for analytical people to try out when the cold blast of wlnter follow. For at no time of year does the Can- adian scene take on such a rlcn and mellow beauty as In that brIs-f PUBLIC FORUM nIu-I In on: In l!" by eorrupondultn of qua! f lnterent. ‘Ila Chif- lottetown Gunrdlnn doe: an Ir; renurll! ennui-n the OIIIIIIII o enrrunnndrnu. i l i l “ELEVATED HIGHWAY” Slim-It Is coming no euro t5 Christmas (and Christmas Is Cfm- ingi not an old ‘fashioned railway but something. "Just as good. A“ elevatecl- highway, built. so as not be hold the snow in winter will permit cars and trucks to run Ill or nearly all the year round. Ind demonstrate the triumph made In modern rcadmaking. Spuch a link connecting _Borden wtth Iottetown will be golden and shine forth to oomIng generations“ In fulness of their fathers. The coming of this great 108d does. not altogether set aside the idea of bull ding a brldge at .Dockendorff's. A bridge would be ,a great convenience to a large part ‘of the country. I; would also B!" employment to the many, who Ire 1n nged of work. I am. Sir. etc M. M. N. NEW ZEALAND BUTTER AND THE PATRIOT SIr,—'I‘he Patriot has returned to its task of trying to exonerate the King Government's blunder- ing ltantiicaps to our dalrylng In- dustrics. From a statement of the Min- Lsber of Agriculture, Ottawa, one of the offenders, that "no New Zeakmd Butter has come Into Oun- ada since early In the year." ll frles to palm off the much too “buttery” argument, that “the price of butter is not affected by the importation" (mark you). From thls It worms through l» wordy “red herrmg" argument, to conceal the real facts. , The New Zealand summer oom- mences ivhcre ours ends, and thelr season for butter production has just opened. consequently It Ia ob- vIous that no new butter has yet been entered for consumption In. Canada. But merchants are now confronted with their new lum- mer production Investors. speculators. so Ofbefi abused as monled Interests, are the safeguards of agrloultural produc- tion. admittedly making a profit for themselves, In their governing control of saipply and demand. 0n- rfches the producer to a much greater extent than they do them- selvas. They purchase and stone our surplus _In times of' over- production. If they did not. but- ter, eggs and other products WW“! be drugs on the markets, almost unsaleable when quantities are the largest, and. If sold at all, at enor- mous sacrifice. And when those Investors find our tmfive butter pfOdUCf, In stor- age increasing to the extent OI 10,000,000 pounds. and the New Zealand butter now ready to flood the market, under the King Go- r-rtimcnfds abolished “dumping ditty", and Its open door policy. they refuse to risk investment. production is In excess of current demand. and the dalrying Interests are suffering the downward trend f I . o Lgfcieig follow the record. Vlfheh the King Government reduced New Zenland dufies to 1c per lb.- when 30.000000 rounds We" dumped on our markets, when prlces which IBJTIIEIS can well re- member dropped down to abOUI 16c. when Hon, John Mvers asked. you to "Look at your milk cheques thr- facts are beyond dispute. When (he Bennett Government took charge the farmers Interests were quickly grappled with. Nej be left until we feel we have seen the last of It. Whefher we have 0r not. It Ls worth while at this time quoting the great American naturalist, John Burroughs, on his charming Idea of why It. gets thIs description: "This halcyon period of our autumn wI1I always In some way be associated with the Indian. It ls red and yellow and dusky llke 111m. The smoke of his camp flre seems again in the r11". The me- mory of him pervades the woods. His plumes and moccasins and blanket of skins from just. the costume the season demands. It was doubtless hIs chosen period. The gods smile upon him they; If ever. The time of the chase, the sea=on of the buck and the doe. and of the ripening of all forest fruits; the time when all men are Incipient hunters, when the first frosts have given pimrgency to the nix". wht-n Io b0 abroad on the hilLs or in the w0od=-is a delight that both old and young feel - If the red aborizlne ever had hls summer of fullness and Miller‘!- mrnt. If must have been at. this season. and It flftv bears his name." If is not unique to this contin- cut, for others appreciate It. In England it Is known as SI. Mar- tin's summer or All Hollows sum- met". Germans call It Old Woman's or St. Lukols summer. while In ItlnY if is nnmrd for Sf. Teresa. Yet for Canada Indian summer scams to b0 particularlv apt. and cerfalnlv It ls more than welcome. respite that yields Its rlchest rol- ours to the dying of the year. 'I'hen there ls haze and a great pram —-the quiet flames of tree: and the “long blue stretches of Ortober hills." If Is a reluctant season: one that l szcms to be happlly fashioned forl an approach to the season of tho snows It Is the muse magnffltwnt In nature's tinendfnq march. Ju=t why we should, however. call If fndlan summer Is sflll somnhln-v t thn as we Ingllcated above should ert was right. After the first week I cnpltillnfr-d to the cxfrn‘. of com- promise. Some nights are bath tihrhls, and some are not On the latter, our apartment Is as serene ns n convent garden: but. on both nlizhts the train despatcher at the Grand Central Statfon ls not as busv as my nephew. All the clubs to which he belongs hold lonz ses- sions: teachers have asslrzned ex- trttrrdIm-rv amounts of home- work: vlsltors and telephones an! lmmlnent from dlnner on past. bedtime. - From the Atlnntfo Monthly. C1151‘- attastation of the spIrIt and Inlthr . representing Limited Zeclmd butter duty wga raised to oovery Hon. Mr. Bennett, under- took to “peg prices." He Drovlded for government purchase of sur- plus butter at. Mo, to be ahl Yes. then we government. the King admlnfstra- and relegated the dafryfng and butter Interests to the chaos so famllfar to Liberal trade hung- mdi g! heclmeohgeflobemf-IOM “mm, e mw. 4d by Kfng liberals that storage buyers are now shv of Investment. and the farmer suffers. consumed In , noun-II outcome of the tradition- al Conservative polfcv of develop- ing our home markets. Because of this Canada is the highest priced and most profitable market on the western hemisphere. The New zealnnder realises this, and wel- omnes the animosity of the Hon. Mackenzie King In opening our markets for their exploitation. It 15 our dafrymen who suffer. and the Patriot apologist. labours to discover aIIbIs and excuses. ! am, Blr. etc. LEWIS P. TANTON. - . To Be Prtied (Globe and Mall) David Lloyd George, as was In- evitable that he would. has said hi; piece on the Munich agreement. In 1t he was his own Potent. scathing self, Vltuperatlon Is ex- pected of’ him. Car-elem exaggera- tion of the facts In favor or the phrase has long been his license. It Is flninhlnst virflmlement of a. once-mo ens om . His attitude on the Munich " we" is u natural u the Inven- Mve In which If. was dresed. What else could Lloyd Georse frnmer 01' Versailles, fmmder of the M88119 of Natlons, defender of "collective security." have said and been con- sfstent with himself. kw urchi- fects have me utility m mend amid the ruins of theIr own g-reatnws and clulm the blame for them- selves. "Peace at the prloe of consci- enoe"—"subordfna.bed honor w I118 quiet lIfe"— "Brltafn huvlost. the ms of the world and Its Own se wespecf." ‘mese ue arsh words for a man to hurl agafnn his country, 00mins: from where they dld, allowance. In all charity. should be made. ‘The’? measure to the dram the bitterness In the Little Welshman’: cup. Munich was very personal to hlm- He laid its foundations twenty years mo. He If unv man could. should be able to calculate the prIce. It was Just one more of a aer- ies of Instalmenfspaldto preserve the shame and Injustices of fhe"vfc- furious peace." In his condemns- tfon of the Czechoslovak settle- ment Lloyd George has not only criticized the men of Munich. Llovd George has damned himself. What else can any one who Mace Ihe restorative Budd's Pills Phone enemfes sirong. —his cause for shame words are the shame is deep. Gnslric Distress, and W35 born defense of Its Injuvi dictators resurrected the war. If. was by the Illtoi fraudulent sectirlty, which ganlzed and (IPIPIIfIOd. ' country was. (lisarntecl cnemlcs If any man In the Lloyd George Is that Wm. H. Leishman & Co. on November lat & 2nd, I938 You are cordially invited to attend this showing of fine woolléns and models. 8c, tinder special treaty a limited ' quantity was rmltted to enter at duty mumm- Ins ufy" clause o! 4c. n. wu fro?) reoovfinzlb ac! fate that. re- ngdgllou [Toume Mu‘ -'° C 8 . B51! yuiiswidrriiys- EVANS STOMAKJII MIXTURE abroad. the loss Qontrfbubed Evans’: Stomach a i- n» ream treuury. There was no n prelcrl mm of iiliimff Ices however. by god bus-Ines; he Evans o LODKIOII, pnglinm resumed cost; In e rItLsh mar- 5nd I: gold for lhc iri-nfnreni kegL of Indigestion, “m,” Immediately after defeat of his "YSPBDSIB. Sour stonmii, tfon abolished the dumping duty "m" lllmvflls lwculiu Imam 5nd opened ‘tine doorlagaln dIoD gr‘: “waf-‘ik r 1 u" New Zeulan surpus, an e you on] u, . » some Liberal desoollerm abolished You will b. aengiitid “iifilflll the surplus buying commission. results. rnrcr: PER uorru: sac. i?‘ MAGS 131.000 vol“, For pale and thin co -, combination QEPECIKIITHDIL lhle in the treatmentof lhogg diseases where theIr nrfcln 1; traceable lo an impovvrk condition of the blond, Hon. Dr. Manfon. Conservatlve Leader. has declared that no per 8W1! hlshlr rwummoid m. can‘ of ‘wiculturll prodqmu u lood Food for the frrninn-nt an“, Th B m, o! rheumatism and for 11105,. O TRY rr TODAY. PRICE PER pox 50¢ We wlsh all our customers lo know that we now Iiuve In "OCR Marallles 72% Genuine French Castlle soap. — 39c r ho A. s. A. Table .31 X 49c per Bottle of I00 Remember The ~ Meek all Prices. THE 2 MACS is Two 315 ll} crif 'I'Iicrc will prove Ln Empire l". d Da" . l.\f quite so bitter as n mun c’ ed by self-reproach. _ NQVEMBER 2. ms ~ 4»- ‘C S. A. McDONALDX announce the visit to their store of MR. F. . W. TWISS § . A valu- Mtws For a. Delicious Cup 0f Grange Peltoe Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN , Full Flavoured Tea. l Demands Real Skill AND THE CAREFUL MIXING OI?‘ I GOOD COOKING _\'. GREDIENTS. EQUAL SKILL ANI) (‘.-\ If") IS REQUIRED IN THE PRODUCTION OF OUR CHEWING TOBACCO. THE RAW LEAF UNDER GOES CAREFFI. PROCESSING BEFORE IT IS Olflfiflfiil) TO THE PUBLIC UNDER THE WELI- KNOWN NAME HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10¢ Per Fig Man ufacf ured by iucltsv and mcunsou _